Command Parsing

Branch Workflows / Submitting Code Changes

The main FVWM repository treats the master branch as stable, in that it’s the
branch which has the most tested code on it, and the branch from which releases
are made. Formal releases of FVWM are tagged, in the form x.y.z, historical
versions of FVWM are tagged as version-x_y_z. Untagged code may well
accumulate on master, which will go to form the next release.

Other branches in the repository will reflect on-going development from core
fvwm-workers. As such, these branches are often in a state of flux, and likely
to be rebased against other branches. NO code should be based off topic
branches, unless explicitly agreed with other developers, who might need to
collaborate.

Branch naming

Branch names are used to try and indicate the feature, and who is working on
them. So for example, a topic-branch will be named as:

initials/rough-description-of-branch

For example:

ta/fix-clang-warnings

denotes that the branch is worked on by someone with the initials TA and that
the branch is about fixing warnings from Clang.

Sometimes, if more than one person is collaborating on a branch, the initials
prefix might not be needed.

Updating NEWS

When submitting patches, please also update the NEWS file with relevant
highlights as to new functionality and/or bug-fixes. For inspiration, GNU
have a list.

Submitting Pull-requests

External contributions are always welcomed and encouraged. If you’re thinking
of writing a new feature, it is worthwhile posting an email to the
fvwm-workers mailing list to discuss whether it’s a good idea, and to check no
one else is working on that feature.

Once a pull-request is opened, an email is sent to the fvwm-workers list so we
can take a look at it.

Alternatively, if pull-requests are not an option, then git-send-email can be
used, sending the relevant patchsets to the fvwm-workers mailing list.

Protected branches and the use of Travis-CI

Pull-requests made will result in the use of Travis-CI being run against the
branch. This builds the copy of the pushed code in a Ubuntu environment, with
all the additional libraries FVWM could use, loaded in. Builds are made against
gcc and clang, because both those compilers cover slightly different angles
with respect to compiling. All warnings are treated as errors, and if a build
does not succeeded, ensure the code is fixed, and pushed back out on the same
branch. Rebasing is recommended; Travis-CI and Github handle this just fine.

The FVWM repository also treats the master branch as protected. This is a
GitHub feature
which means the master branch in this case cannot have changes merged into it
until Travis-CI has verified the builds do not fail.

This has merit since not every developer will be using the same operating
systems (Linux versus BSD for instance), and that master is meant to try and
be as release-worthy as can be.

NOTE: This means that no work can be commited to master directly. ALL
work that needs to appear on master—including the release
process—MUST go via a separate topic-branch, with a PR (pull-request).
Not even fvwmorg owners are an exception to this.

Merging changes / Pull Requests

The history of master should be as linear as possible, therefore when
merging changes to it the branch(es) in question should be rebased against
master first of all. This will stop a merge commit from happening.

If using github this process is easy, since the Merge pull request button
has an option to Rebase and Merge. This is what should be used. See also
the documentation on Github

If this is manual (which will only work when the Travis-CI checks have
passed), then:

The following tries to list all the conventions that the fvwm developers
adhere to, either by consensus through discussion, common practice or unspoken
agreement. It is hopefully useful for the fvwm development newbie.

Programming Languages

The following programming languages are allowed:

ANSI C

Perl

Portable /bin/sh scripts for examples.

New Code Files

There are templates for new code files in the fvwm directory. Try to always
use them as they provide a clean structure of the header and code files.
Please honour the section titles. For example, put all static functions
(and only static functions) under the “local functions” section.

All .c files must have

#include "config.h"

as the first non-comment line. Otherwise the settings made by the configure
script may not be used. This can cause random problems.

File Names

The names of the code files in the fvwm directory are in lower case.

Files in the libs directory may begin with a capital ‘F’. This letter is
reserved for wrapper files for third party libraries or modules. For
example, FShape is an abstraction of the XShape X server extension and FBidi
is a wrapper for the fribidi library. Do not use the ‘F’ for other
purposes.

Copyright Notices

A copy of the GPL should be at the beginning of all code files (.c) and
scripts, but not at the beginning of header files (.h).

Maintaining Man Pages

Every feature must be described with all options in the man page.

Creating a release

Before deciding to make a new release, please check with the fvwm-workers
mailing list that this is the right time to do so. This will give adequate
warning for other developers to give status updates about any in-flight
development that’s happening which might impact a potential release.

Make sure you have all optional libraries installed.

NOTE: as master is a protected branch, changes made to files during the
release phase must be done on a separate branch, and not on master directly,
as pushes to this branch are not allowed until checks have been done on it.
This means the end result of the release-phase must have these changes issued
as a pull-request against master.

Fix all warnings and problems, commit the changes and repeat the previous
command until no more warnings occur.

Tag the release: git tag -a x.y.z – where x.y.z represents the
appropriate version number for the release.

Build and test the release tarballs:

Run: make distcheck2

If that succeeds, check for fvwm-x.y.z.tar.gz in the current working
directory. This is the release tarball which will be uploaded to Github.
Unpack it to a temporary directory and build it; check the version as well,
via: ./fvwm --version.

Push the tag out: git push origin x.y.z – where x.y.z is the specific
tag created in step 5.

Set ISRELEASED to "no" in configure.ac and commit and push that out.

Issue a PR (pull-request) against master and mege that in assuming all
checks pass. If not, fix the problems, and repeat this step.

Upload the fvwm-x.y.z.tar.gz tarball to Github against the tag just
pushed.

Update the fvwm web site (see below)

Updating fvwm-web

Ensure you’ve a checkout of the repository:

git clone git@github.com:fvwmorg/fvwmorg.github.io.git

Update the RELEASE variable in Makefile to the desired version which
has been released.